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Oct 29, 2012
10/12
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of administrations, he held the second highest positions in both the civil rights division and the environment and natural resources division. he has held several other positions in the justice department including the assistant to the solicitor general, associate deputy attorney general, and acting assistant attorney general in the office of legal policy degette ki is a graduate of yale law school. please welcome roger. [applause] >> thank you very much for that nice introduction and for inviting me today. thank you to the cato institute and rick and stuart writing this wonderful book. i am going to begin by keeping praise on rick and stuart for this book to be it's terrific. it makes an extraordinary contribution to the debate on these issues. i think it's unprecedented my contribution in many ways. i've read the book, and it's very readable and it's got lots of charts and diagrams for those of you that like that sort of thing. and it's very well written. everybody should buy multiple copies. [laughter] give them to friends and family. people you know, people you don't know. it's a terrific
of administrations, he held the second highest positions in both the civil rights division and the environment and natural resources division. he has held several other positions in the justice department including the assistant to the solicitor general, associate deputy attorney general, and acting assistant attorney general in the office of legal policy degette ki is a graduate of yale law school. please welcome roger. [applause] >> thank you very much for that nice introduction and for...
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May 9, 2012
05/12
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the border is a very different environment today than when i began my career. i personally have witnessed the evolution of the border of the past 25 years. both in terms of additional resources applied against the threat, as well as the change and the adversary's tactics. the border patrol plan builds on a foundation the foundation of the 2004 national strategy. the 2004 strategy focused on getting the border patrol organize and resource through the deployment of personnel, technology and infrastructure. the 2012 to 2016 involves this set of objectives, programs and initiatives that apply information, integration and rapid response to develop and deploy new and better tactics and techniques and procedures to achieve our objectives. the principal theme of our strategy is to use information, integration, and rapid response to meet all threats. these pillars are essential as we continue to build upon an approach that puts the border patrol's greatest capabilities in place to combat the greatest risks. first, information provides situational awareness and intellige
the border is a very different environment today than when i began my career. i personally have witnessed the evolution of the border of the past 25 years. both in terms of additional resources applied against the threat, as well as the change and the adversary's tactics. the border patrol plan builds on a foundation the foundation of the 2004 national strategy. the 2004 strategy focused on getting the border patrol organize and resource through the deployment of personnel, technology and...
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Feb 13, 2012
02/12
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i think even if the answer is have that we will understand the environment we're in, and you see a lot of investing in. [inaudible] in other words, you fear that there is enough distinction between the parties that if mitt romney becomes the president that you could have such change that you want to keep some of that cash rather than invest it and? >> no. no. well, i don't fear. i think it would be in all likelihood something after the election, it's ridiculous we have to wait that long, but after the election president obama, republican-controlled house and senate, i think at that point some reasonable solutions will be promulgated. that's my hope and my belief your and it just takes that time, and it's too bad with the gerrymandered districts, fox news, cnn, no one stays in washington on the weekend talks about. you are penalized if you compromise. you losing your home district. that dynamic is just killing us right now as a country. we've got to have a lethargic experience to get us to the other side. >> what does it take them a nasty more of a political leadership question, both of
i think even if the answer is have that we will understand the environment we're in, and you see a lot of investing in. [inaudible] in other words, you fear that there is enough distinction between the parties that if mitt romney becomes the president that you could have such change that you want to keep some of that cash rather than invest it and? >> no. no. well, i don't fear. i think it would be in all likelihood something after the election, it's ridiculous we have to wait that long,...
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Dec 27, 2012
12/12
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they would enjoy being in an all male environment. this was the kind of thing texas legislators were saying about gay people. the gay-rights movement did get going, it got going in a number of cities across texas including houston and enjoyed some early successes and the 70s and 80s and then it got slammed down in a referendum on a very narrow civil-rights ordnance protecting gay city employees in the houston in january of 1985, that itself was an example of this backlash against gay-rights so there was a great deal of persistence in texas and every year the legislature refused to repeal this lot even though it was asked to do so in the texas courts turned away any challenge to the law by saying no one has been arrested. >> host: what happened with john lawrence and tyro garner? they were arrested and prosecuted. how did their case moved through courts? >> guest: the story begins from the moment they are arrested and the lead deputy, joseph quinn, filed his charges, those charges go into the justice of the peace courts with jurisdicti
they would enjoy being in an all male environment. this was the kind of thing texas legislators were saying about gay people. the gay-rights movement did get going, it got going in a number of cities across texas including houston and enjoyed some early successes and the 70s and 80s and then it got slammed down in a referendum on a very narrow civil-rights ordnance protecting gay city employees in the houston in january of 1985, that itself was an example of this backlash against gay-rights so...
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Oct 16, 2012
10/12
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an environment with racial austerity is promoted. the reason why university of texas concluded that environment was not met here, laid out in several different information points,. >> that is only another 16 years, right? that seniors were going to call it all off? >> we don't establish it as a timeslot. >> in means the advocates are, and what we would look to his once we are looking at this -- we're looking at it carefully, and once we reach that point, of course we are going to stop. [talking over each other] >> some of the stuff you agree with and some of the stuff it says that you don't agree with. >> i don't know that i disagree with anything. >> we have a point that i'd like you to answer is the documentation is just too small to use a racial criteria. so how do you answer the argument? >> first i would say that it consideration of race helps enrollment. secondly, i point to the fact that african-american hispanics admissions doubled between 2002 and 2004. so this is not a very important impact on diversity at the university of
an environment with racial austerity is promoted. the reason why university of texas concluded that environment was not met here, laid out in several different information points,. >> that is only another 16 years, right? that seniors were going to call it all off? >> we don't establish it as a timeslot. >> in means the advocates are, and what we would look to his once we are looking at this -- we're looking at it carefully, and once we reach that point, of course we are going...
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Oct 13, 2012
10/12
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this court recognized the classroom is the most important environment for the educational diversity are realized and so the university of texas and determine whether it reached a mass looked at the classroom. >> i'm asking how. do they require ever to check a box or do they have some unfair at this person looks 132nd hispanic and not enough. >> they did a study, your honor, that took into account the same considerations in discussing the enrollment. >> what kind of the study? >> from a supplemental joint appendix. >> it doesn't explain how they go about classroom by classroom deciding how many even argue. >> hirsute lesson each classroom batteries identified. this! each cluster in the university knows which students are taken as classes. you cannot if you gauge go back to my paycheck on the farm. >> that's a yes or no question. you go back to my paycheck on application application form in deciding whether economics to a one has a sufficient number of african-americans or hispanics. .. >> no, not on a per class basis. >> but class. >> you're looking at the classrooms, your honor. what th
this court recognized the classroom is the most important environment for the educational diversity are realized and so the university of texas and determine whether it reached a mass looked at the classroom. >> i'm asking how. do they require ever to check a box or do they have some unfair at this person looks 132nd hispanic and not enough. >> they did a study, your honor, that took into account the same considerations in discussing the enrollment. >> what kind of the study?...
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Jun 11, 2012
06/12
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i had taken him on a trip to the arctic with me so we talk a lot about environment and various aspects. my next age grandson, who is 16, we just talked about vietnam. he has just been writing a paper about vietnam. we talked about that. by the way, they all went with me to the white house for the medal of freedom, and it was amazing. that grandson, jack, said to president, you're going to kick butt. to stand there and watch it. but basically i do talk -- my grandchildren ask me a lot. we haven't talked so much about syria but we generally talk a lot about american history, and about the issues of the day. they understand that not everybody's grandmother is on television, and as one of the funniest things is my youngest granddaughter, when she turned seven, said to her barracks the big deal about grandma made being secretary of state? only girls are secretary of state. >> host: that's wonderful. they're lucky kids and we're lucky to have talked to you today. thank you very much. >> guest: thank you so much, anne. >> that was book tv's signature program in which authors of the latest non
i had taken him on a trip to the arctic with me so we talk a lot about environment and various aspects. my next age grandson, who is 16, we just talked about vietnam. he has just been writing a paper about vietnam. we talked about that. by the way, they all went with me to the white house for the medal of freedom, and it was amazing. that grandson, jack, said to president, you're going to kick butt. to stand there and watch it. but basically i do talk -- my grandchildren ask me a lot. we...
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Dec 27, 2012
12/12
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i grew up in a religious environment and i'm proud of it. i am proud of it but i thank god i believe in god or i would probably be enormously angry right now. so they i am grateful and unapologetic. >> one interesting sort of -- it is remarkable when we started talking a little bit about how the sub by this change over time and we could have could've also edit the 19th amendment, women becoming part of this ever greater ark of democratic inclusion. >> and prohibition. i will drink to that. [laughter] >> but that was repealed. in general most of the amendments, as you said before, maybe more perfect. >> or less perfect perk is. >> but then we got rid of it. >> i don't drink so i understand. [laughter] >> on revision is pretty extraordinary, the constitution freed every american to be eligible for public office. there is no religious test, and that wasn't a prominent feature of the state constitution. a lot of them actually had religious test. >> obviously new england, you had established a religion so i understand that but i'm just simply say
i grew up in a religious environment and i'm proud of it. i am proud of it but i thank god i believe in god or i would probably be enormously angry right now. so they i am grateful and unapologetic. >> one interesting sort of -- it is remarkable when we started talking a little bit about how the sub by this change over time and we could have could've also edit the 19th amendment, women becoming part of this ever greater ark of democratic inclusion. >> and prohibition. i will drink...
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Apr 6, 2012
04/12
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>> not necessarily, unless you think about how the environment, the traffic environment may be changing. digital billboards, other things. >> okay. now these studies though were, basically within the last deb qaed? >> that's correct. >> okay. so, a third, or 30%, somewhere between 24 and 30% are then, these are crashes due to outside crashes? >> that's correct. i would use those numbers as anne mentioned, police reported data is particularly unstable. that it's relatively the largest category. however it varies somewhat. >> okay. doing a little reading, there was a nhtsa report of a couple years ago looking at just inside distractions and in that case conversation with the other person was the biggest bar by far. >> that's correct. and what, one, again, if you have a passenger, that passenger could either be protective, meaning they're with you, in the case of two older drivers, driving together. they can provide a protective effect they're looking out for hazards so forth. with teen drivers if you have passengers accidents go up as the number about teens increases. sometimes occupants,
>> not necessarily, unless you think about how the environment, the traffic environment may be changing. digital billboards, other things. >> okay. now these studies though were, basically within the last deb qaed? >> that's correct. >> okay. so, a third, or 30%, somewhere between 24 and 30% are then, these are crashes due to outside crashes? >> that's correct. i would use those numbers as anne mentioned, police reported data is particularly unstable. that it's...
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Dec 27, 2012
12/12
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i grew up in a religious environment and i'm proud of it. i am proud of it but i thank god i believe in god or i would probably be enormously angry right now. so they i am grateful and unapologetic. >> one interesting sort of -- it is remarkable when we started talking a little bit about how the sub by this change over time and we could have could've also edit the 19th amendment, women becoming part of this ever greater ark of democratic inclusion. >> and prohibition. i will drink to that. [laughter] >> but that was repealed. in general most of the amendments, as you said before, maybe more perfect. >> or less perfect perk is. >> but then we got rid of it. >> i don't drink so i understand. [laughter] >> on revision is pretty extraordinary, the constitution freed every american to be eligible for public office. there is no religious test, and that wasn't a prominent feature of the state constitution. a lot of them actually had religious test. >> obviously new england, you had established a religion so i understand that but i'm just simply say
i grew up in a religious environment and i'm proud of it. i am proud of it but i thank god i believe in god or i would probably be enormously angry right now. so they i am grateful and unapologetic. >> one interesting sort of -- it is remarkable when we started talking a little bit about how the sub by this change over time and we could have could've also edit the 19th amendment, women becoming part of this ever greater ark of democratic inclusion. >> and prohibition. i will drink...
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Sep 28, 2012
09/12
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in light of the federal budget environment, this balancing is particularly important to ensure that nextgen implementation stays on course while also sustaining the current air traffic system structure. and also equipment. a system that will be core of the national airspace system for several years to come. mr. chairman, ranking member and members of the subcommittee, nextgen is critical to modernizing the system, increased efficiencies from nextgen improvement may not meet aviation system capacity. the modeling indicates that even if nextgen is implemented, some of the 35 busiest airports in the nation may not be able to handle the forecast an increase in air traffic. if these projections are accurate, additional capacity, including the construction of additional runways, taxiways and terminal gates will also be needed. making infrastructure improvements can be very costly and lengthy process, requiring substantial planning and analysis before it can be implemented. thank you, mr. chairman. this concludes my prepared statements. >> thank you. thank you all for your statements. i would like
in light of the federal budget environment, this balancing is particularly important to ensure that nextgen implementation stays on course while also sustaining the current air traffic system structure. and also equipment. a system that will be core of the national airspace system for several years to come. mr. chairman, ranking member and members of the subcommittee, nextgen is critical to modernizing the system, increased efficiencies from nextgen improvement may not meet aviation system...
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Mar 3, 2012
03/12
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we passed me the issues of today's global security environment are working together. combating threats to global peace and prosperity is not and should not be the task of any one nation. welding and sustaining strong security partnerships is a central and enduring elements of a national security strategy and remains a key element of the new security strategy we announced recently. and our two nations have demonstrated from building strong security institutions in europe and asia in world war ii to sustain former soviet states in the aftermath of the cold war to our work around the globe today a partnership are actually incredibly vital. nowhere are those partnerships more important than in the global maritime comments, assuring the free passage of our ceilings is critical to a security, commerce and the free exchange of goodson eight years. we see that exchange every single day and a military where they operate together, train together and are educated together. partnerships like the one between the united states and can do are one way we can maximize our resources an
we passed me the issues of today's global security environment are working together. combating threats to global peace and prosperity is not and should not be the task of any one nation. welding and sustaining strong security partnerships is a central and enduring elements of a national security strategy and remains a key element of the new security strategy we announced recently. and our two nations have demonstrated from building strong security institutions in europe and asia in world war ii...
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Dec 10, 2012
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and shouldn't that be the prevailing environments assumption? >> you make a very important point in terms of the fact that the actuarial review was done not today but at a point with economic projections that are primarily in july over the summer, and so it's accurate that interest rates have dropped further than were built built-in to the primary actuarial view. there are two offsetting factors to that though. one is that home prices have performed better than were used in the actuarial. and that, based on what we know today, even for this year, the actuarial would be significantly better if it were performed today, just on that one variable and then the second is that the actuarial review is a point in time that assumes that we do no further fha business and one of the things that is artificial about it if i can use that term, is that when interest rates go lower, it assumes people pay off faster. that is accurate. what it doesn't take into account is that late about half of those folks refinance into an fha loan. so, by the nature of the actu
and shouldn't that be the prevailing environments assumption? >> you make a very important point in terms of the fact that the actuarial review was done not today but at a point with economic projections that are primarily in july over the summer, and so it's accurate that interest rates have dropped further than were built built-in to the primary actuarial view. there are two offsetting factors to that though. one is that home prices have performed better than were used in the actuarial....
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Oct 5, 2012
10/12
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this is an assignment, the radio and tv environment much like the search engine environment. where competition is a click away. it wasn't a mouse click back and. you have to click the dial on your television set. competition was always a click away. there was no cost to switch and you didn't have to pay to switch. so it was easy to switch into situations and you might say how could the exercise market power. the answer is that you exercise market power to the volume and intensity of advertising. advertising is how you make money, and the value of advertising is how you boost how much money you can make. the easiest is to start i think there's a lot of discussion about whether google has market power in the advertising market. that's an interesting discussion. that's not the place to start. the place to start is in search engines, and we think company with a great successful product of my tech company of market power? if they did have market power, how would they go about exercising at? and the answer is they would have more advertising. they would have more ads and because it
this is an assignment, the radio and tv environment much like the search engine environment. where competition is a click away. it wasn't a mouse click back and. you have to click the dial on your television set. competition was always a click away. there was no cost to switch and you didn't have to pay to switch. so it was easy to switch into situations and you might say how could the exercise market power. the answer is that you exercise market power to the volume and intensity of...
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Oct 23, 2012
10/12
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we must be good stewards of our environment. we must make sure that we protect our environment. >> moderator: is man-made can't change real? sinema: there's a lot of overwhelming evidence that man's impact has made a difference. i support plans to help create solar energy and improve alternative energy here in arizona. it's part of my job plan. it's not only important to help us address climate change, it's also important from a national security. the faster we become more dependent on renewable sources right here in arizona like solar energy, the less likely will continue being dependent on volatile markets the middle east. parker: here's the problem we have right now. we have the largest oil reserve in the world and if we tapped into that reserve, believe me, our economy would take off. and so we have to make sure that if someone said, that our president does not bow down to a saudi king. we have the reserves. we must utilize reserves. i'm in favor of nuclear. i'm in favor of clean coal. i'm in favor of solar. so whatever that
we must be good stewards of our environment. we must make sure that we protect our environment. >> moderator: is man-made can't change real? sinema: there's a lot of overwhelming evidence that man's impact has made a difference. i support plans to help create solar energy and improve alternative energy here in arizona. it's part of my job plan. it's not only important to help us address climate change, it's also important from a national security. the faster we become more dependent on...
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Mar 4, 2012
03/12
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it was an extraordinary intellectual environment. absolutely extraordinary. the st. albans inculcated a motivation of public -- mindedness. we debated all of the public issues of the day. there was a wide range of ideological positions that peek took. we were encouraged to speak out. we were encouraged to write down our views, and to this day i have very fond feelings toward st. albans, and again, very fond feelings towards my teachers. >> host: princeton? >> guest: i went to princeton university in 1973 and 1977. again, a wonderful experience. i think, again, just a host of teachers. several of whom have become very close friends of mine. one of my teachers at princeton was man by the name of stanford levinson. >> host: university of texas. >> guest: a very distinguished, very interesting intellectual in general, the legal academic, i had him for politics. in fact i had him for a course on constitutional interpretation at princeton. he gave me my lowest grade at princeton. we had been life-long friends ever since. he reads -- he has read all of my books in manuscrip
it was an extraordinary intellectual environment. absolutely extraordinary. the st. albans inculcated a motivation of public -- mindedness. we debated all of the public issues of the day. there was a wide range of ideological positions that peek took. we were encouraged to speak out. we were encouraged to write down our views, and to this day i have very fond feelings toward st. albans, and again, very fond feelings towards my teachers. >> host: princeton? >> guest: i went to...
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Oct 31, 2012
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enormously, as saudi arabia and our other gulf allies would benefit from a more productive, less tense environment in the region. then you take israel even to compare it to taiwan, that issue was bracketed between the two countries, between china and the united states. it was bracketed. you could similarly have something between the united states and iran over the us rail and palestinian issue. but i must come back to this other issue. this is in our strategic interest to come to terms with iran just like china. when mao was in charge, when nixon went to see mao, he had just presided over the killing of over three million chinese. they didn't just have a nuclear weapons program, they had tested nuclear weapons. the interest here is what is in the u.s. national interest. even there this is another critical challenge for the united states. as middle eastern populations become more empowered and have more of a say in each of their countries, they are not going to vote for, they are not going to support a secular, democratic u.s. model for their governance. they're not going to do it. they're not goin
enormously, as saudi arabia and our other gulf allies would benefit from a more productive, less tense environment in the region. then you take israel even to compare it to taiwan, that issue was bracketed between the two countries, between china and the united states. it was bracketed. you could similarly have something between the united states and iran over the us rail and palestinian issue. but i must come back to this other issue. this is in our strategic interest to come to terms with...
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Oct 17, 2012
10/12
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today, it's a multisource, multimedia environment. it's not just a tv, it's internet. we see activists quoted in every report extensively from damascus, lebanon, you name it so i think your question leads to ad broader policy issue. what is today -- what are we -- 11 years after 9/11? what is our information footprint? in the arab world, in the muslim world, and worldwide, our information foot print in the world where russia, china, you mentioned al jazeera itself, qataris, the french, the german, you name it, spending 1.7 billion a year for operations. if i may, a separate issue that we didn't talk about, and that is syrian chemical weapons. that escalates intervention because nobody should trifle with chemical weapons, and when you read a report that the north koreans and the chinese help the syrians to produce, to secure, to manage their chemical weapon stocks when the fighting is all over the place and they're stocking up on diesel generators in case they are under siege in the chemical weapon facilities? that scares even me. >> okay. >> say a word about the kurds.
today, it's a multisource, multimedia environment. it's not just a tv, it's internet. we see activists quoted in every report extensively from damascus, lebanon, you name it so i think your question leads to ad broader policy issue. what is today -- what are we -- 11 years after 9/11? what is our information footprint? in the arab world, in the muslim world, and worldwide, our information foot print in the world where russia, china, you mentioned al jazeera itself, qataris, the french, the...
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Sep 28, 2012
09/12
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talks about to we want to have energy diversity and efficiency and limit the emissions put into the environment. and that policy is in complemented by a series of subsidies and or tax relief and or credit, however you want to think about it, to encourage that policy. we, as citizens, get paid or get a tax credit for write-off of driving the fuel efficient and electric car, right? you get to go on the high occupancy vehicle lane with an electric car. it's an incentive to buy a fuel efficient and or a car that meets the energy policy of the country. as citizens we also get a tax write-off if we buy fuel efficient windows and heating and cooling systems. businesses like the potomac and others that are probably in the room today they also get tax write-offs for buying and installing energy-efficient fuel efficient, lower emission heating and cooling systems, windows etc and their businesses and adopting more green policies and diversified energy policies. and then third, for those businesses to try to encourage innovations again there's a 17% tax credit for research and development for a new techno
talks about to we want to have energy diversity and efficiency and limit the emissions put into the environment. and that policy is in complemented by a series of subsidies and or tax relief and or credit, however you want to think about it, to encourage that policy. we, as citizens, get paid or get a tax credit for write-off of driving the fuel efficient and electric car, right? you get to go on the high occupancy vehicle lane with an electric car. it's an incentive to buy a fuel efficient and...
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Oct 30, 2012
10/12
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are we looking at the new era because of the kind of fragmentation of the media environment and what kind of challenges might there be for the classification regime and prosecutors going forward? >> you mean is aera journalist? >> it complicates the issue let's put it that way. it's not of "the new york times" >> neil? >> they're worried about the article on the front page of the post that has was that information you were thinking about now. all of new types of journalists or media operate under the constraints of the traditional media do. i give a lot of credit to the "washington post" and the others when the of clauson for the information they think they have that information to the government and say look, you make the case for why we shouldn't disclose this and there is a give-and-take and that often results in the delay of the publication of the classified information or the media out what agree not to publish it and, you know, i yielded to a situation where i think they made the wrong call which is to publish an article of the program that is a very well-run programs there is
are we looking at the new era because of the kind of fragmentation of the media environment and what kind of challenges might there be for the classification regime and prosecutors going forward? >> you mean is aera journalist? >> it complicates the issue let's put it that way. it's not of "the new york times" >> neil? >> they're worried about the article on the front page of the post that has was that information you were thinking about now. all of new types...
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May 1, 2012
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he had 3 trillion-dollar programs, one for cap-and-trade on the environment for global warming and the second billion dollars on health care. it was estimated in fact at one point to be $1.6 trillion almost a trillion dollars on stimulus. it had been more than a trillion until it was pared down just slightly to $878 billion. so where do we go from here? might look provides an idea for the future, and the idea centralizes around the experience of senator lisa murkowski in alaska. senator murkowski was supposed in a primary by tea party candidate and went by senator demanded, and the tea party candidate cannibalized lisa and defeated her in the primary. then lisa came back in an extraordinary move to run a right-hand campaign. do you know how hard it is to write in murkowski? if you spell it with a y instead of an i your ballot is thrown out. if you spell it with an all instead of the u, your ballot is thrown out. but she won, and i think senator murkowski's experience shows that if you inform the public sufficiently and motivate the public sufficiently, you can reinforce what is outside
he had 3 trillion-dollar programs, one for cap-and-trade on the environment for global warming and the second billion dollars on health care. it was estimated in fact at one point to be $1.6 trillion almost a trillion dollars on stimulus. it had been more than a trillion until it was pared down just slightly to $878 billion. so where do we go from here? might look provides an idea for the future, and the idea centralizes around the experience of senator lisa murkowski in alaska. senator...
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Jan 5, 2012
01/12
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so expectations have been cranked up for material wealth, but in some ways they were shocked by the environment around them. so it is nsa -- a disparity between the long-term trend, which is for how you are and relate semantically higher levels of living standards and the periodic crises that, you know, make everybody feel very insecure. >> receptor marginal symbol point, which the advent of the economic recession. society couldn't actually measure the world around it in didn't think he could control it for the well-being. just go right, i mean come on jane austin was a life around 18 to, 910 save humanity was destitute. and matter terms, that would be like 90% of world population living on the equivalent of a dollar a day. not only was she meant and meant to be poor, but in jane austen's time, which of course say. already a tremendous opulence for her society comment that you have largely people who are not really poor, but also fatalistic. there's a sense that the world was the way it was and no one could measure it or even change it. >> guest: yeah, that was the point. not only were nine par
so expectations have been cranked up for material wealth, but in some ways they were shocked by the environment around them. so it is nsa -- a disparity between the long-term trend, which is for how you are and relate semantically higher levels of living standards and the periodic crises that, you know, make everybody feel very insecure. >> receptor marginal symbol point, which the advent of the economic recession. society couldn't actually measure the world around it in didn't think he...
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Oct 17, 2012
10/12
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in the meantime my do see the economies of scale to reflect the uncertainty of the regulatory environment. it is our fault for arguing about it. that is a joke. [laughter] if that happens going forward i suspect that will not happen to every firm. as a percentage of gdp i think that is the misguided and a fine development. >> that still does not talk about cross border raids it -- resolution but it would protect creditors in full if they fund operating companies i am afraid we are not yet to out of the woods. i never heard peter before say there was the undeniable advantage to being a large bank. that is a huge statement and completely inaccurate. this six largest bank holding companies have assets just over 6% and go back to the mid-1990s the same six companies were 16 or 17%. what is the benefit we have derived for that growth? the answer is nothing would the economies of scale of 100 billion yen of total assets? no one can find you think you can probably have the goldman sachs award. i talk to see if those and ceos and sg you need jpmorgan chase to be at this level to run your business
in the meantime my do see the economies of scale to reflect the uncertainty of the regulatory environment. it is our fault for arguing about it. that is a joke. [laughter] if that happens going forward i suspect that will not happen to every firm. as a percentage of gdp i think that is the misguided and a fine development. >> that still does not talk about cross border raids it -- resolution but it would protect creditors in full if they fund operating companies i am afraid we are not yet...
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Aug 21, 2012
08/12
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and as had been said in many pages here about a union being the best environment in which to raise children, a couple union, these people also deserve to raise children as a couple. and to have their union be -- >> okay. >> defined. >> okay. ask everybody, again, please keep your eye on that clock. we're going to try to keep to a minute. mr. coback. >> chris coback from kansas. i oppose this amendment, i think the wording is too broad. especially the last sentence, it is not the role of government to judge. well, our government routinely judges situations where you might regard complete, people completely affecting themselves like, for example, the use of controlled substances, like, for example, polygamy that is voluntarily entered into. we condemn those activities even though they're not hurting other people, at least directly. so this is worded way too broadly for inclusion. >> mr. bopp, was there any discussion of this in the subcommittee? >> again, the only proposal related to this subject failed for lack of second. i would like to address the issue substantively. first, as to whether
and as had been said in many pages here about a union being the best environment in which to raise children, a couple union, these people also deserve to raise children as a couple. and to have their union be -- >> okay. >> defined. >> okay. ask everybody, again, please keep your eye on that clock. we're going to try to keep to a minute. mr. coback. >> chris coback from kansas. i oppose this amendment, i think the wording is too broad. especially the last sentence, it is...
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Oct 10, 2012
10/12
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in economic and social environment that is breaking down. that structure and effectiveness. a water crisis, an ecological crisis, or the majority living on less than $60 a month. you're the head of families, 30 year old and have a wife with three or four children, the population growth is right now off the charts. and you are living and $60 a day . come into our communities and system i can pay you 400, but you have to believe and carried his rifle. the level of desperation. what it as people get sucked up, that is an unfortunate reality. the trick here is right now we did have a good granular as you of what troubles structures called region where they're is a lot of region influence. we have a general view. you can't fight this kind of war. you have to have that on the ground you. this of the mission had the interventions. it does mean that we have to have a much more clear picture of who our adversary is, how are ever serve relates to the local population and the points of pressure. >> what is your assessment? some major reverses as a result of the drug program. the drough
in economic and social environment that is breaking down. that structure and effectiveness. a water crisis, an ecological crisis, or the majority living on less than $60 a month. you're the head of families, 30 year old and have a wife with three or four children, the population growth is right now off the charts. and you are living and $60 a day . come into our communities and system i can pay you 400, but you have to believe and carried his rifle. the level of desperation. what it as people...
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Oct 10, 2012
10/12
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making sure an energy policy that leads us in the direction of not only independence and a cleaner environment but an energy policy that creates 5 million new jobs. a foreign policy that ends this war in iraq. a foreign policy that goes after the one mission the american public gave the president after 9/11, to get and capture or kill bin laden. and to eliminate al qaeda. a policy that would, in fact, engage our allies in making sure that we knew we were acting on the same page and not dictating. and a policy that would reject the bush doctrine of preemption and regime change and replace it with the doctrine of prevention and cooperation, and ladies and gentlemen, this is the biggest ticket item we have in this election, the most important election you will ever, ever have voted in since 1932. and we are such stark differences. i would follow through on barack's policies to get in essence i agree with everything, every major initiative he has suggested. >> moderator: governor. palin: and heaven forbid yes, that that would ever happen. no matter how this ends up, that that would ever happen wit
making sure an energy policy that leads us in the direction of not only independence and a cleaner environment but an energy policy that creates 5 million new jobs. a foreign policy that ends this war in iraq. a foreign policy that goes after the one mission the american public gave the president after 9/11, to get and capture or kill bin laden. and to eliminate al qaeda. a policy that would, in fact, engage our allies in making sure that we knew we were acting on the same page and not...